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  2. Feb 12, 2020 · Here's what "banjax" means - Banjax verb INFORMAL. ruin, incapacitate, or break. He banjaxed his knee in the sixth game of the season. Basic research showed that it comes from the 1930s - 1930s: originally Anglo-Irish, of unknown origin. (From Lexico) Merriam Webster gives a more specific "first known use" - 1939. However, it says:

  3. The earliest known use of the verb banjax is in the 1950s. OED's earliest evidence for banjax is from 1956, in the writing of Samuel Beckett, author. banjax is of unknown origin.

  4. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › banjaxbanjax - Wordorigins.org

    Mar 18, 2020 · It’s Irish slang meaning to batter or ruin. Banjax is first recorded as a noun meaning a mess in 1925, when Sean O’Casey uses it in his play Juno and the Paycock: I’m tellin’ you the scholar, Bentham, made a banjax o’ the Will. The word seems to have been a favorite of Flann O’Brien.

  5. Mar 15, 2024 · The words have similar but distinct meanings. If something is banjaxed, its ruined, broken, confounded, or shattered (including in the ‘tired’ sense; cf. killed in Irish slang). It’s often applied to damaged or destroyed machines – vehicles, phones, computers, household appliances – or their parts.

  6. The meaning of BANJAX is damage, ruin; also : smash.

  7. Jun 2, 2024 · banjax (third-person singular simple present banjaxes, present participle banjaxing, simple past and past participle banjaxed) (UK, originally Ireland, slang) To ruin or destroy.

  8. ban·jax. (băn′jăks′) tr.v. ban·jaxed, ban·jax·ing, ban·jax·es Chiefly Irish Slang. To ruin or destroy: "Having to pay for Emma's lodgings every week had completely banjaxed his finances" (Edna O'Brien). [Origin unknown.] American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

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